Summary: This adds workarounds for the code that was preventing React from compiling when linked against an iOS App Extension target.
Some iOS APIs are unavailable to App Extensions, and Xcode's static analysis will catch attempts to use methods that have been flagged as unavailable.
React currently uses two APIs that are off limits to extensions: `[UIApplication sharedApplication]` and `[UIAlertView initWith ...]`.
This commit adds a helper function to `RCTUtils.[hm]` called `RCTRunningInAppExtension()`, which returns `YES` if, at runtime, it can be determined that we're running in an app extension (by checking whether the path to `[NSBundle mainBundle]` has the `"appex"` path extension).
It also adds a `RCTSharedApplication()` function, which will return `nil` if running in an App Extension. If running in an App, `RCTSharedApplication()` calls `sharedApplication` by calling `performSelector:` on the `UIApplication` class. This passes the static analysis check, and, in my opinion, obeys the "spirit of th
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1895
Reviewed By: @svcscm
Differential Revision: D2224128
Pulled By: @nicklockwood
Summary:
The CameraRoll-related APIs were mixed in with the Image classes due to legacy coupling issues. Now that the APIs have been decoupled, it makes more sense for the CameraRoll classes to live in a separate library.
This will be a breaking change for apps using the CameraRoll or related APIs. Fix is to add the RCTCameraRoll lib to your project.